63

I am using AWS ec2 instance. On this instance I'm resulting some files. These operations are done by user data.

Now I want to store those files on s3 by writing code in user data itself.

  • So how can I store those files on s3?
  • Have any tutorials on it?
1
  • Did you have any luck with this? Jan 24, 2014 at 7:55

9 Answers 9

78

Using the most recent AWS CLI (http://aws.amazon.com/cli/) you can use the following commands to copy files from your Ec2 Instance or even you local machine to S3 storage.

aws s3 cp myfolder s3://mybucket/myfolder --recursive

You'll then get something like:

upload: myfolder/file1.txt to s3://mybucket/myfolder/file1.txt 
upload: myfolder/subfolder/file1.txt to s3://mybucket/myfolder/subfolder/file1.txt

If this is your first usage of the aws CLI tool then you'll need to run:

aws configure

This will ask you to enter your access key & secret along with specifying a default region.

7
  • 4
    aws cli is much better than s3cmd. Dec 17, 2016 at 19:58
  • @ajtrichards Is there any way to provide access key&secret using command line argument?
    – EmptyData
    Jun 21, 2017 at 16:36
  • @EmptyData you could use the --profile PROFILE_NAME flag to indicate which set of credentials to use? If you've setup multiple AWS profiles on your command line that is. Jun 21, 2017 at 18:28
  • 1
    It's an even better idea to use IAM roles at the instance level so that you don't need to store credentials on the server. source Apr 30, 2019 at 17:04
  • 1
    100% you should use IAM roles when in EC2 to manage creds and access permissions. May 1, 2019 at 8:40
32

There are a number of ways to send files to S3. I've listed them below along with installation and documentation where relevant.

An example of the PHP implementation:

<?php

    // Simple PUT:
    if (S3::putObject(S3::inputFile($file), $bucket, $uri, S3::ACL_PRIVATE)) {
        echo "File uploaded.";
    } else {
        echo "Failed to upload file.";
    }

?>

An example of s3cmd:

s3cmd put my.file s3://bucket-url/my.file

Edit

Another option worth mention is the AWS CLI http://aws.amazon.com/cli/ This is widely available, for example it's already included on AmazonLinux and can be downloaded via Python (which is installed on many systems including linux and windows).

http://docs.aws.amazon.com/cli/latest/reference/s3/index.html

Available commands, cp ls mb mv rb rm sync website

http://docs.aws.amazon.com/cli/latest/reference/s3api/index.html for interacting with S3

1
  • Great ans friend .. was just looking for this :)
    – user3964336
    Jun 23, 2015 at 6:12
12

Install s3cmd Package as:

yum install s3cmd

or

sudo apt-get install s3cmd

depending on your OS. Then copy data with this:

s3cmd get s3://tecadmin/file.txt

also ls can list the files.

For more detils see this

10

I'm using s3cmd to store nightly exported database backup files from my ec2 instance. After configuration of s3cmd, which you can read about at their site, you can then run a command like:

s3cmd put ./myfile s3://mybucket

1
  • Have you seen my answer? Nov 21, 2013 at 11:22
6

Use s3cmd for that:

s3cmd get s3://AWS_S3_Bucket/dir/file

See how to install s3cmd here:

This works for me...

4

All attempts to mount s3 as a pseudo filesystem are problematic. It's an object store, not a block device. If you must mount it because you have legacy code that must have local file paths, try goofys. It's about 50x faster than s3fs. https://github.com/kahing/goofys

s3cmd is a bit long in the tooth these days. The AWS cli is a better option these days. The syntax is a bit less convenient, but it's one less tool you need to keep around.

If you can stick to http access. It'll make you life easier in the long run.

3

On AWS CLI I have used the following command to copy zip file from EC2 instance to S3

aws s3 cp file-name.zip s3://bucket-name/
2

I think the best answer in general is in fact above, to use the aws command, but for the cases where you don't want to bother installing anything else, it's also worth mentioning that you can just download the file over HTTPS, e.g. open a browser and navigate to:

https://s3.amazonaws.com/(bucketName)/(relativePath)/(fileName)

That also means you could just use wget or curl to do transfer from shell prompts.

0

Im assuming you need to copy from a new instance to s3. First create a IAM role so you dont need to run aws configure and this should all work at launch time. Second Install the cli and then define your copy job using aws cli in user data. Example below for Ubuntu 18. Assign the IAM role to your instance.

Userdata:

#!/bin/bash
apt-get update -y
apt install awscli -y
aws s3 cp *Path of data* s3://*destination bucket*  -recursive *--other options*

To create an IAM role 1. Go to the IAM console at https://console.aws.amazon.com/iam/ 2. In the left pane, select Roles then click Create role. 3. For Select type of trusted entity, choose AWS service. Select EC2. Select Next: Permissions. 4. For Attach permissions policies, choose the AWS managed policies that contain the required permissions or create a custom policy. 5. Click Service Choose A service, type S3 in Find a service box, click S3, select actions (all or read + write and others you may need) 6. Click on Resources, Select Resource (you can enter all resouces or limit to specific bucket with the ARN) 7. Click Next: Review policy. Enter an Name and Description. Click Create policy. 8. Return to Create Role page, click refresh, filter policy by name you assigned, select the policy. 9. Click Next: Tags and then add any required tags 10. On the Review page, enter a name and description for the role and click Create role.

References

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